Donald Trump’s New Border Czar Means Business… and Democrats are Furious
By lidblog.com
Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 02:15:52 +0000
Donald Trump has riled the left-wing, anti-American Democrats once again, this time by naming Biden critic and immigration expert Thomas D. Homan as his “border czar.” Homan is an excellent choice for this, certainly. No one knows more about fixing border policy better than Homan who ha spent the last 5 years bedeviling the left […]
News24 | WATCH | SA closes Lebombo border port of entry as Mozambique violence escalates
By www.news24.com
Published On :: Thursday Nov 07 2024 13:26:55
South Africa has closed the Lebombo port of entry to and from Mozambique after 15 officials from the Ressano Garcia border fled to SA on Thursday morning for protection.
News24 | Business as usual at Lebombo border post with traffic flowing between SA and Mozambique after unrest
By www.news24.com
Published On :: Saturday Nov 09 2024 12:26:31
It was business as usual at the Lebombo border post between SA and Mozambique on Saturday morning, with vehicles moving freely between both countries after a shutdown earlier this week.
News24 | Mozambique opposition's Mondlane calls for protests at border posts, ports
By www.news24.com
Published On :: Tuesday Nov 12 2024 11:23:37
Mozambican opposition presidential candidate Venancio Mondlane has called for gatherings at ports and borders, and in major cities from Wednesday for what he describes as a fourth round of demonstrations against a stolen election.
Former Director of ICE Tom Homan is the Trump Nominee for “Border Czar.” But he isn’t the only nominee being named on this Veteran’s Day. Homan is one tough cookie- he will be charged with overseeing the deportations of criminal migrants, as well as the Northern border, aviation security, and maritime security. It’s a tall …
Investigation: Waste of the Day – Border Security Team Hasn’t Made One Arrest
By deneenborelli.com
Published On :: Fri, 30 Aug 2024 13:09:23 +0000
Investigation by Jeremy Portnoy originally published by RealClearInvestigations and RealClearWire Topline: A $1.4 million state task force created to protect the border between New Hampshire and Canada has not encountered a single illegal border crosser this year, according to data obtained by the American Civil Liberties Union. Key facts: The state has spent $353,425 so …
By www.chathamhouse.org
Published On :: Thu, 15 Aug 2024 17:27:13 +0000
What is the future of cross-border data flows?
16
September 2024 — 6:00PM TO 7:00PM
Anonymous (not verified)
Chatham House and Online
Navigating long-standing tensions and newfound difficulties for unlocking shared prosperity among modern, digital economies.
Cross-border data flows can unlock shared prosperity among digital economies, advance international security, and address cybercrime and global crises. But ensuring the free flow of data across borders involves navigating complex regulatory, security, trust, political, and technical challenges. Developing effective frameworks and agreements to support data flows is a significant undertaking.
Recent bilateral and multilateral agreements and initiatives have advanced data-sharing, respecting the right to privacy and upholding notions of sovereignty. This has contributed to clearer rules and (potentially) better solutions such as the OECD declaration on government access to data held by companies. Further progress, supportive of public safety and national security, is on the horizon, like G7 support for data free flow with trust and industry-led, trusted cloud principles on protecting human rights and competitiveness.
More work is needed to operationalize commitments and advance ongoing negotiations, like US–EU negotiations on e-evidence in criminal proceedings. This is key for ensuring ‘hard’ legal and regulatory mechanisms complement OECD principles. Stakeholders from law enforcement, national security, data protection and industry must confront tensions between sovereign prerogatives and cooperation. They must also overcome traditional silos between law enforcement and national security work. On the horizon are newfound challenges (for example, in harmonizing legal frameworks and responding to advances in technology). All the while, stakeholders must work together to promote economic interests, data protection, privacy and cybersecurity.
This expert panel discusses the future of cross-border data-sharing, raising questions including:
What value does cross-border data-sharing bring and where are its current ‘pain points’?
To enable data free flows, how should principles complement ‘hard’ legal and regulatory mechanisms?
Beyond states, law enforcement, major industry players and international organizations, what roles should SMEs, the technical community and civil society stakeholders play in shaping and operationalizing principles?
Looking ahead, where is progress in data-sharing principles and arrangements expected or possible?
A drinks reception follows the event.
This event is supported by Microsoft as part of a project on data sharing. The project has benefited greatly from the insights of a multi-stakeholder taskforce and concludes with an open-access special issue of the Journal of Cyber Policy.
Water, Ecosystems and Energy in South Asia: Making Cross-Border Collaboration Work
By www.chathamhouse.org
Published On :: Wed, 29 Jun 2016 13:19:15 +0000
Water, Ecosystems and Energy in South Asia: Making Cross-Border Collaboration WorkResearch papersysadmin29 June 2016
A new paper sets out the factors that have made previous cross-border projects in South Asia successful, arguing that cooperation around water is feasible despite the region’s political differences and economic assymetries.
—
Indian people walk in the Ganga riverbed in Allahabad on 1 September 2015. Photo: Getty images.
The countries of South Asia share some of the world’s major river basins – the Ganga (or Ganges), the Brahmaputra and the Indus. These rivers and their tributaries flow through seven countries, support more than 1 billion people, irrigate millions of hectares of land and are of cultural importance to many of those who rely on them.
River management presents common challenges across the region. These include physical factors such as droughts, flooding, cyclones and climate change, as well political and institutional factors impeding the development of solutions and policies to improve resource management and reduce vulnerability. Water is increasingly seen as a source of competition, with population growth, industrialization and urbanization exacerbating the pressures on supply.
Although South Asian examples of regional cooperation in general are limited, there is a clear positive trend. In areas such as disaster response and cross-border power trading, regional and bilateral engagement is beginning to take place. Multilateral official arrangements exist for trade and other economic issues, but there is none on water or ecosystems. However, as the benefits from cooperation become proven, its desirability is likely to gradually enter mainstream policy thinking on water issues.
This research paper sets out the factors that have enabled cooperation, and the processes adopted, in previous successful cross-border projects. It focuses on four categories of cooperation: development of early-warning systems for natural disasters, in particular floods; protection of cross-border ecosystems; sharing of learning, through the showcasing of innovative approaches in one country that can be adopted by others; and power trading, in particular the development of hydropower in Bhutan and its export to India.
The paper argues that cooperation around water in South Asia is feasible despite political differences and economic asymmetries. Different forms of collective action, and common understanding of both the threats and the shared benefits from cooperation, are required to foster more partnerships within the river basin states.
Cross-border conflict, evidence, policy and trends (XCEPT)
By www.chathamhouse.org
Published On :: Thu, 26 Aug 2021 08:03:34 +0000
Cross-border conflict, evidence, policy and trends (XCEPT)
This five-year policy-focused research programme seeks to respond to the challenges of long-term cross-border conflicts by exploring the drivers behind them.
dora.popova26 August 2021
Protracted conflicts in the Middle East and North Africa, Horn of Africa and parts of Asia, although usually arising from intra-state disputes, rarely remain contained within national borders. Their effects reverberate outward and external actors are drawn in.
The longer these wars last, the more difficult they are to resolve as the interests of international actors collide and the web of economic and political interactions which sustain violence and connect conflict across borders expand and deepen.
The Cross-border conflict, evidence, policy and trends (XCEPT) research programme brings together world-leading experts to examine conflict-affected borderlands, how conflicts connect across borders, and the drivers of violent and peaceful behaviour.
Chatham House provides research leadership to the programme, as part of the wider consortium, and our research explores:
the intersection of conflict supply chains which sustain and embed violence
coping supply chains for survival-based economic activity which occurs in the context of violence
Three geographic case studies will be supported by cross-cutting workstreams on gender and social inclusion, livelihoods, and border security. Each will produce analysis and recommendations to inform international policy responses to conflict across borders.
These case studies will focus on:
armed actors and financial flows through Iraq and the Levant
human smuggling across Libya, East and West Africa
gold mining and weapons flows across Sudanese borderlands
The consortium is made up of a range of other organizations, including the Asia Foundation, the Malcolm H. Kerr Carnegie Middle East Center, the Rift Valley Institute, Chemonics UK and King’s College London.
By www.chathamhouse.org
Published On :: Wed, 08 Dec 2021 10:09:43 +0000
Belarus-EU border crisis reveals wider security threatExpert commentNCapeling8 December 2021
By engineering a crisis at the Belarus border, Lukashenka is attempting to exacerbate vulnerabilities within the EU. Securitizing migration is not the answer.
When thousands of migrants began freezing to death in the forests on the Belarus border with Poland, Belarusian leader Aliaksandr Lukashenka was forcing the European Union (EU) into a tough choice – either give in to blackmail and welcome migrants whose attempts to trespass the EU border were a result of his policy of luring them to Belarus to put pressure on the EU, or keep the borders closed and declare solidarity with Poland despite its known mistreatment and illegal pushbacks of potential asylum-seekers.
Lukashenka’s action was aptly exploiting three key pressure points of the EU – as a normative power where the human dignity of migrants is overlooked while the European border and coastguard agency Frontex stands by, as a geopolitical actor seeking to externalize its migration problem by signing readmission agreements with transit countries, and as a community of values with the EU-Poland dispute over rule of law.
Now is the time for a robust strategy aimed at preventing what is currently a rogue state from turning into an outright terrorist regime
His approach is typical ‘dictaplomacy’ and democracies which have confronted such a ‘continuation of war by other means’ in their past dealings with dictatorships know that blackmail mostly serves to divert attention away from a rogue leader’s misdemeanours towards his own population. But if this had been game of chess the EU would have been in check.
Thankfully checkmate was avoided – so far – as a compromise was found following weeks of heightened diplomatic efforts. Lukashenka was forced to back-pedal and take care of the migrants, and no humanitarian corridor was needed as the EU sent funds and took measures to support organizations providing shelter for the migrants in Belarus, while airlines and governments in the source countries were pressured to restrict flights to Minsk and started repatriating part of the migrants.
Causing a nuisance
‘Operation Gateway’ – the outline of which was allegedly drawn several years ago and tested by Russia in 2016 at its own borders with Norway and Finland – certainly caused a nuisance, but it ultimately backfired as Lukashenka now has to manage the remaining 2,000-5,000 migrants who refused to be flown back, as well as facing increased international sanctions. However, the fact that Angela Merkel had to personally call him made it look as if Lukashenka did not back down for nothing.
The EU and NATO, including the UK, only reacted collectively to this crisis once it was already out of hand, leaving questions over whether this experience of Lukashenka’s dictaplomacy is a wake-up call to boost resilience against rogue warfare, and to upgrade strategic assessments of the ‘Lukashenka problem’ too.
Back in June, the Belarus ministry of foreign affairs (MFA) announced its withdrawal from the Eastern Partnership and the visa facilitation and readmission agreement with the EU, while Lithuania sent early warnings about a ‘hybrid attack’ at its own border with Belarus. In August, Der Spiegel reported details of an alleged smuggling scheme whereby Tsentr Kurort – a company closely linked to the Administration of the President of Belarus with offices in the Middle East – was handling the shipping, accommodation, and relocation of migrants.
The EU and NATO, including the UK, only reacted collectively to this crisis once it was already out of hand, leaving questions over whether this experience of Lukashenka’s dictaplomacy is a wake-up call to boost resilience against rogue warfare
The smuggling of migrants was entirely predictable as Lukashenka has hinted many times Belarus could stop ‘protecting the EU from armed migrants’ seeking to enter it illegally. He has upped his rhetoric beyond notions of hybrid warfare by saying he needs Russian nuclear-capable bombers to ‘help him navigate the migrant crisis’, even hinting Belarus could station both Russian nuclear weapons and S-400 anti-aircraft missile systems. This shows Lukashenka is feeling increasingly cornered – which could lead to more unpredictable security crises.
Russia and Belarus are deepening relations
Although there is no smoking gun pointing to direct Russian involvement in orchestrating the hybrid attack at the EU’s borders, a new step in the military rapprochement between the two countries came when Putin and Lukashenka approved a new Military Doctrine of the Union-State of Russia and Belarus – a non-public document including a joint concept of migration policy. Lukashenka has also come off the fence over Crimea by openly accepting the legality of the peninsula’s integration with Russia.
Given Russia is also sabre-rattling over Ukraine, the risk of an accidental escalation into armed conflict is increasing in what feels like a return to classic Cold War logic, with the difference that the East is now offensively using the South for confronting the West. In recognition of the threat, the UK has joined the US, Canada, and the EU in the fresh sanctions on Belarus.
Private prison stocks soar after Trump names Tom Homan 'border czar'
By www.upi.com
Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 21:59:51 -0500
Private prison stocks soared Monday after President-elect Donald Trump announced immigration hardliner Tom Homan as the nation's next "border czar." GeoGroup jumped 4.5%, while CoreCivic increased 6.3%.
Private prison stocks soar after Trump names Tom Homan 'border czar'
By www.upi.com
Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 21:59:51 -0500
Private prison stocks soared Monday after President-elect Donald Trump announced immigration hardliner Tom Homan as the nation's next "border czar." GeoGroup jumped 4.5%, while CoreCivic increased 6.3%.
By www.om.org
Published On :: Fri, 10 Jul 2015 15:16:19 +0000
Marloes Achterveld, from the Netherlands, shares about falling in love with the people of Curarrehue in southern Chile during OM Chile's Intensive Missions Training.
Click It Or Ticket Campaign Starts May 24 With Border To Border Kickoff Event In Delaware
By news.delaware.gov
Published On :: Wed, 19 May 2021 13:00:52 +0000
[DOVER, DE] May 19, 2021 — During this year’s national Click It or Ticket seat belt campaign, which will take place May 24 through June 6, 2021, the Delaware Office of Highway Safety (DOHS) will be teaming up with law enforcement nationwide for a Border to Border (B2B) kickoff event taking place on Monday, May […]
By community.cadence.com
Published On :: Thu, 31 Oct 2024 10:05:54 GMT
Dear community
We would like to have more minimalistic and customized sheet borders for our schematics. I used this guide to create a starting point. Essentially, I made a copy of the US_8ths library and modified the Title symbol to look something like that:
Problem 1
The variable ilInst~>libName points to the library of the sheet border symbols, not to the library of the schematic. How do I need to modify this field in order to see the library name of the schematic where the border is instantiated?
Problem 2
The function CCSgetCreator() was taken from here. This solution does not seem to work with our management toll (we use VersIC); the function always returns nil as value. What is the simplest way to display the name of the user that created the schematic? A custom field that could be filled manually would also do the job for us; it doesn't need to be something that automatically fetches data from a database system.
Microsoft makes a crossborder connection in North America
By master-7rqtwti-2nwxk3tn3ebiq.eu-2.platformsh.site
Published On :: Tue, 25 Feb 2020 13:24:36 +0000
While governments grow more protectionist over trade and physical borders, companies such as Microsoft are bridging the gap by funding international collaborative enterprises.
The East-West Wire is a news, commentary, and analysis service provided by the East-West Center in Honolulu. Any part or all of the Wire content may be used by media with attribution to the East-West Center or the person quoted. To receive East-West Center Wire media releases via email, subscribe here.
The East-West Wire is a news, commentary, and analysis service provided by the East-West Center in Honolulu. Any part or all of the Wire content may be used by media with attribution to the East-West Center or the person quoted. To receive East-West Center Wire media releases via email, subscribe here.
For Journalists, Reporting on Cross-Border Disputes Poses Special Challenges and Dangers
By www.eastwestcenter.org
Published On :: Thu, 22 Jul 2021 02:58:12 +0000
For Journalists, Reporting on Cross-Border Disputes Poses Special Challenges and Dangers
For Journalists, Reporting on Cross-Border Disputes Poses Special Challenges and Dangers
The East-West Wire is a news, commentary, and analysis service provided by the East-West Center in Honolulu. Any part or all of the Wire content may be used by media with attribution to the East-West Center or the person quoted. To receive East-West Center Wire media releases via email, subscribe here.
The East-West Wire is a news, commentary, and analysis service provided by the East-West Center in Honolulu. Any part or all of the Wire content may be used by media with attribution to the East-West Center or the person quoted. To receive East-West Center Wire media releases via email, subscribe here.
Iran says militant attack on Pakistani border leaves 5 security forces dead
By www.voanews.com
Published On :: Sun, 10 Nov 2024 14:31:33 -0500
Tehran, Iran — A militant attack near the Pakistani border with Iran left five Iranian forces dead, the state-run IRNA news agency reported Sunday.
The report said the dead were ethnic Baluch members of the paramilitary Revolutionary Guard's volunteer Basij force and were killed in Saravan city in Sistan and Baluchistan province. Saravan is some 1,400 km (870 miles) southeast of the capital Tehran.
No group immediately claimed responsibility for the attack.
Earlier in the day, state TV reported that Revolutionary Guard forces killed three terrorists and arrested nine others in a military operation. The report did not specify which group the suspects belonged to.
Last month, unknown gunmen killed four people, including the chief of the Revolutionary Guard in the province.
In September, gunmen killed four border guards in Sistan and Baluchistan province in two separate attacks. The militant group Jaish al-Adl, which seeks greater rights for the ethnic Baluch minority, claimed responsibility for one attack in which one officer and two soldiers were killed.
The province, which borders Afghanistan and Pakistan, has been the site of occasional deadly clashes involving militant groups, armed drug smugglers and Iranian security forces. It is one of the least developed parts of Iran. Relations between the predominantly Sunni Muslim residents of the region and Iran's Shiite theocracy have long been strained.
Pakistan: Terrorist Attack from Across Iran Border Kills 4 Soldiers
By www.voanews.com
Published On :: Sat, 01 Apr 2023 11:21:40 -0400
ISLAMABAD — Pakistan said Saturday that four of its soldiers were killed when a "group of terrorists" from across the Iranian side of the border attacked a routine military patrol operating between the two countries.
The deadly cross-border raid took place in the remote Kech district in southwestern Baluchistan province abutting Iran, the Pakistani military said in a statement.
"Necessary contact with the Iranian side is being made for effective action against terrorists on the Iranian side and to prevent such incidents in the future," the statement said, without providing further details.
The Iranian Embassy in Islamabad condemned the attack and expressed sympathy to the families of the slain soldiers.
"Terrorism is the common pain of the two countries and the two Muslim nations have sacrificed precious lives in the fight against this plague," the Iranian Embassy said on Twitter.
"Undoubtedly, strengthening the joint cooperation between the two countries will prevent terrorist groups from achieving their sinister goals," wrote the Iranian diplomatic mission.
Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif expressed “grief and sorrow over the martyrdom” of the security personnel in the terrorist attack, his office said in a statement.
No group immediately took responsibility for Saturday's attack, the second incident this year in Baluchistan, where ethnic Baluch separatists routinely target Pakistani security forces.
In mid-January, four Pakistani troops were killed when a military convoy patrolling along the more than 900-kilometer border came under an insurgent attack from across the Iranian side.
The outlawed Baluchistan Liberation Army, or BLA, routinely takes credit for attacks on Pakistani security forces. Officials in Islamabad say the group has set up sanctuaries in border areas of Iran, charges Tehran rejects.
The Global Terrorism Index, released in March by the Australia-based Institute for Economics and Peace, said that BLA was responsible for 36% of nearly 650 terror-related deaths in Pakistan in 2022, making it "the fastest-growing terrorist group in the world."
Pakistan, the United States, and Britain have designated the BLA as a terrorist organization.
Baluch insurgents claim to be fighting for the independence of Baluchistan, alleging extortion by the central government of the region's natural resources and discrimination against its ethnic Baluch population. Pakistani authorities reject the charges.
The sparsely populated province, which also shares a significant chunk of the country's nearly 2,600-kilometer border with Afghanistan, is at the center of a multi-billion-dollar infrastructure development project being funded by China in Pakistan under Beijing's global Belt and Road Initiative.
CSU Rams in unfamiliar territory heading into Border War
By www.denverpost.com
Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 23:56:53 +0000
Even though the Colorado State football team has already checked a couple of boxes off its to-do list for this season, the stakes are still as high as ever for Friday night's Border War game against Wyoming.
Update of the Readiness Assessment for Cross-Border Paperless Trade: Bangladesh
By www.adb.org
Published On :: 2024-11-08
This report highlights Bangladesh’s cross-border paperless trade readiness, outlines the significant legal and technical gaps it still needs to address, and provides a comprehensive action plan.
Almaty–Bishkek Economic Corridor Regional Improvement of Border Services Project
By www.adb.org
Published On :: 2025
The project will build and equip 3 climate-resilient and energy-efficient border crossing points (BCP) between the Kyrgyz Republic and Kazakhstan on the Kyrgyz side of the border and a training center for the Kyrgyz Border Service (the project EA). The project with the total loan and grant financing of $37 Million will help facilitate trade and tourism between the Kyrgyz Republic and Kazakhstan and will contribute to the sustainable economic development along the Almaty-Bishkek Economic Corridor.
GMS Cross-Border Livestock Health and Value Chains Improvement Project
By www.adb.org
Published On :: 2025
The project will reduce trans-boundary animal diseases (TAD), food safety and zoonotic disease risks and strengthen livestock value chains and COVID-19 responses through investments in infrastructure, capacity building and policy support. The project will have the following outcome: health, value chains, and formal trade of livestock and livestock products improved. The project will be aligned with the following impact: GMS vision as a leading supplier of safe and environmentally friendly agriculture products realized.
U.S. to Reopen Borders to Vaccinated Travelers from Canada, Mexico
By www.medicinenet.com
Published On :: Wed, 13 Oct 2021 00:00:00 PDT
Title: U.S. to Reopen Borders to Vaccinated Travelers from Canada, Mexico Category: Health News Created: 10/13/2021 12:00:00 AM Last Editorial Review: 10/13/2021 12:00:00 AM
U.S. Reopens Borders to Vaccinated Foreign Travelers
By www.medicinenet.com
Published On :: Mon, 8 Nov 2021 00:00:00 PDT
Title: U.S. Reopens Borders to Vaccinated Foreign Travelers Category: Health News Created: 11/8/2021 12:00:00 AM Last Editorial Review: 11/8/2021 12:00:00 AM
Trump eyes major Day One moves on the border, energy production, electric vehicles and more
By www.washingtontimes.com
Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 16:08:12 -0500
President-elect Donald Trump vowed on his first day in office to sign an executive order that seeks to end birthright citizenship for the children of illegal immigrants and kick-start the largest deportation effort in the nation's history.
Unveiling Diversity: Nudity Across Borders in Global Cinema
By www.chartsattack.com
Published On :: Fri, 18 Oct 2024 12:33:14 +0000
Welcome, film enthusiasts, to a captivating exploration of the diverse world of nudity in global cinema! In an era where cultural nuances shape the way we perceive art, it’s fascinating to dissect how different societies approach the depiction of the human form on the silver screen. Among different diversities like age diversity, political diversity, and […]
Men convicted in Coutts border blockade want convictions overturned, Crown wants new trials
By www.cbc.ca
Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 17:35:03 EST
The two men found guilty of mischief and firearms offences for their roles in the 2022 Coutts border blockade want the Alberta Court of Appeal to overturn their convictions, while prosecutors are seeking new trials on the more serious charge of conspiring to murder RCMP officers, for which they were acquitted.
Freeland says Canada's borders are 'safe and secure' following Trump's election win
By www.cbc.ca
Published On :: Sat, 09 Nov 2024 04:00:00 EST
Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland is reassuring Canadians as officials worry president-elect Donald Trump’s promise to deport millions of undocumented immigrants could send them northward.
Border agency clears employee after Indian media reports link him with terrorism
By www.cbc.ca
Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 17:00:00 EST
A Canada Border Services Agency superintendent is speaking out after being targeted by the Indian government with allegations of murder and terrorism — allegations Canadian authorities say are not backed by any evidence.
Trump's Day One: Deportations, border wall, scrapping Biden humanitarian programs
By www.asiaone.com
Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 09:48:40 +0800
WASHINGTON — Donald Trump is expected to take a slew of executive actions on his first day as president to ramp up immigration enforcement and roll back signature Biden legal entry programs, a sweeping effort that will be led by incoming "border czar" Tom Homan and other Republican immigration hardliners, three sources familiar with the matter told Reuters.
The executive actions would give federal immigration officers more latitude to arrest people with no criminal records, surge troops to the US-Mexico border and restart construction of the border wall, the sources said.
Homan, who served as acting director of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement from 2017-2018 under Trump, will bring a deep understanding of the US immigration system after a four-decade career that took him from a frontline Border Patrol agent to head of the agency that arrests and deports immigrants in the US illegally.
Improving Migrant Child Welfare at the Southwest Border
By www.belfercenter.org
Published On :: Feb 28, 2023
Policymakers need to act now and place child welfare professionals, not law enforcement actors, at the border to effectively screen and interview migrant children. Information sharing practices need to be improved, with a movement away from paper documents that can easily get lost to an approach that is digital, secure, and accessible by the child, their guardian, their lawyer, and their doctor. Further, the enforcement processing facilities need to undergo an immediate infrastructural transformation with the addition of new design features that are necessary and sensitive to the majority demographic that are held within facilities—children and families.
These actions are doable and require no legislative action. Migrant children deserve decisive action to ensure that their health, safety, and well-being is not jeopardized as they seek refuge in the United States.
Europe’s Carbon Border Tax Advances the Fight Against Climate Change
By www.belfercenter.org
Published On :: May 24, 2024
At first glance, the European Union’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism may look like a potential source of international discord. But a closer look suggests that the EU’s strict carbon-pricing regime may be the best chance the world has to achieve the Paris climate agreement’s ambitious emissions-reduction goals.
By www.tax-news.com
Published On :: Mon, 31 Aug 2020 00:00:00 GMT
Luxembourg and Belgium will extend the duration of an agreement that clarifies the tax rules for cross-border workers affected by COVID-19 restrictions.
By www.tax-news.com
Published On :: Fri, 15 May 2020 00:00:00 GMT
On May 13, 2020, the Belgian tax authority announced that the competent authorities of Belgium and Germany have concluded an agreement which clarifies the tax situation of cross-border workers in the context of the COVID-19 health crisis.
Tax-News.com: COVID-19: Belgium And France Clarify Tax For Cross-Border Workers
By www.tax-news.com
Published On :: Thu, 28 May 2020 00:00:00 GMT
On May 15, 2020, the competent authorities of Belgium and France concluded an agreement which clarifies the tax situation of cross-border workers in the context of the COVID-19 health crisis.
By www.tax-news.com
Published On :: Fri, 3 Jul 2020 00:00:00 GMT
Belgium has extended agreements with France, Germany, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands clarifying the tax rules for frontier workers working from home due to COVID-19.
Tax-News.com: France Extends COVID-19 Tax Deals For Cross-Border Workers
By www.tax-news.com
Published On :: Mon, 7 Sep 2020 00:00:00 GMT
The French Ministry of Finance confirmed on August 31, 2020, that several tax agreements applying to cross-border workers during the COVID-19 crisis have been extended.